Stands of two species of African Acacia were monitored for 1 yr in a natural savanna ecosystem, to compare shoot regrowth and leaf chemistry in lightly browsed and heavily browsed trees. Where ungulates concentrated at a seasonal waterhole, A. nigrescens was more severely browsed than the thornier and finer leafed A. tortilis. Shoot regrowth in heavily browsed A. nigrescens more than compensated for herbivory, as net annual shoot extension was not significantly different from that in light browsed trees. Foliage of heavily browsed A. nigrescens was higher in nutrients and lower in condensed tannins than foliage of light browsed trees. We propose that severe pruning by browsing ungulates reduces intershoot competition for nutrients, promotin...
Patterns of browse selection by Boer goats in a representative Acacia karroo community in the easter...
It is assumed that the phytochemistry of browse species protects their biomass and nutrients against...
The tree-grass interactions of African savannas are mainly determined by varying rainfall patterns a...
Suppressed growth forms of woody species are common where fire and herbivory are major ecosystem dri...
We studied the composition of a savanna woody plant community across a natural herbivory gradient ma...
We measured browsing-induced responses of Acacia trees to investigate browsing lawns as an analogy...
We hypothesised that exclusion of long-term browsing leads to decreased nutrient concentrations, inc...
The scarcity of tree regeneration is a major concern for the long-term conservation of tree cover in...
Grass yields in this semi-arid savanna declined as the size of Acacia karroo increased. Browse yield...
Abstract Plant–plant interactions can be a complex mixture of positive and negative interactions, wi...
Carbon-based secondary metabolites (CBSMs) such as tannins are assumed to function as plant defences...
We investigated the linkages between leaf litter quality and decomposability in a savanna plant comm...
Abstract Carbon-based secondary metabolites (CBSMs) are assumed to function as defences that contrib...
An important aspect of managing African conservation areas involves understanding how large herbivo...
Woody plants protect themselves against loss of valuable nutrients and photosynthetic tissue to her...
Patterns of browse selection by Boer goats in a representative Acacia karroo community in the easter...
It is assumed that the phytochemistry of browse species protects their biomass and nutrients against...
The tree-grass interactions of African savannas are mainly determined by varying rainfall patterns a...
Suppressed growth forms of woody species are common where fire and herbivory are major ecosystem dri...
We studied the composition of a savanna woody plant community across a natural herbivory gradient ma...
We measured browsing-induced responses of Acacia trees to investigate browsing lawns as an analogy...
We hypothesised that exclusion of long-term browsing leads to decreased nutrient concentrations, inc...
The scarcity of tree regeneration is a major concern for the long-term conservation of tree cover in...
Grass yields in this semi-arid savanna declined as the size of Acacia karroo increased. Browse yield...
Abstract Plant–plant interactions can be a complex mixture of positive and negative interactions, wi...
Carbon-based secondary metabolites (CBSMs) such as tannins are assumed to function as plant defences...
We investigated the linkages between leaf litter quality and decomposability in a savanna plant comm...
Abstract Carbon-based secondary metabolites (CBSMs) are assumed to function as defences that contrib...
An important aspect of managing African conservation areas involves understanding how large herbivo...
Woody plants protect themselves against loss of valuable nutrients and photosynthetic tissue to her...
Patterns of browse selection by Boer goats in a representative Acacia karroo community in the easter...
It is assumed that the phytochemistry of browse species protects their biomass and nutrients against...
The tree-grass interactions of African savannas are mainly determined by varying rainfall patterns a...